0E L i mW- 0? I|® 3!! r $ Iff fO^SST K'lXiL II [.\iinuit* <' * r °P j«rl nS'il! 1 I- 'SE lai i'er ■ !»«^'rr ■li,:, Crop * ul ** *’ Balt* HR Tin-. K SH^^K 1 ' ! Hli t < «■ : ui-. BH " ! \<*v. ' , ■ > BB /,V " :ii'<> >• w^m 1 ■- 1 HHEr ! s ' >.’! . and mm: •••.( • f• *r- D ' IBuk H. L r r"Wth ! i!- • .• i:• <: Btjx Hi; ;;' Bu |Br>'"-i V'■ ( aru |K,. Mia.nr Hriov TOWr.H ON ■ \j’: ( Mi 1.1. I'EAK HHTmr’Ms ;i" i l-Yrt st Fir.* Hi'ift of ('. L Harris. H| ri;,n l.l- Bureau. H Sir Waller Hotel. £■-; The summit MM n,,w ailonie-l by a . lid tile lookout H/e , . e in«t ruction |H- ' anuouneed HBt;;. 11. i’iliil'i's. direct or m ' 'ilii-elva till!, H < ■■ Xistrur ||H nns donated Wmk leuiiu! in Mount a forest re -1 ' a double utir igM tile iookout Hr- i in' S'ate Foi - jjHuA gB I he structure |H !! 1 ■ d approved by |Hr' It- eoustruc- Hk itirixs is .gained |B* s ’ ff "’ , !ii'}t 'tairs. the second of a |B:- n -try Scrvi -e through the edni -eetintis of *:i>- tirs' having been |H*rr'i! n.miTlis auo in the |H*v* • r ' I larne’r < 'ouiity i7 |H ••••• • radius of '• cart of llin ;<' H Lr. Moore and |B I’.y .astrue! ion of ascertain "f lire- their inci- their tile-lighting iietire ,\'.tile the fir r s eall l;e kept under Button market B\ ■~*f — * at 1 i!ei,,!,iK>d prices Points and Sold 10 Higher. Hit. X„v. -(.*P)—Xho cot steady today at H•p^i(■t , . advance of 3 B 4i I" to 13 points above H l,^;; « figures in the early little S.inhern hedging but offi rings -were light "f L-'-To for January B* 1 ' mu i’ ! e,i to further H®" ri! i« at: -nine local of Intviiig promoted by B**> Liverpool cables. u,, 'f a iittle realizing i:f (I or 7 points H :t - will, th,. market eoni- at tin. ,md of the tirst H wise waiting for ero[ ( reiiort. ' l l | l'-- irpm-ted hedging B 1 1; * * I - , *. with prices HL v s ai:,! r " ats . many ( i’ Vls f! ”' 'rimmed. Vis 'arinicu.t ,>) the second hair hh!-., ~ » n jvJ., I '"’ n of Bell & Ps 6 y' ;ivi heliotrope dec- KiouanT !' :!T ' ,horo now "A , Charges. ii,,;,! ’ X,, v. 22.—0 P) *n auditor Was Sl! "' f ‘ a low days urt ''l Kanawha - - A THE CONCORD TIMES $2.00 a Year, Strictly i n Advance. Climax of Hall-MiHs Case . Itm'n BlOiwwP-^llt?^'aSl«M&» A r si ; MMB orvnif r N'' , i m wl^rr S , l . U ‘i™' ne * B r '" ''»''"' ,i,: » ’"T'" ’» U,mv„ 0,. aM in lha ™,it™ s m at Som prbsfl-utor Vs sho** - tint »! 5 f ?‘ tn ° d ‘n ‘ ,ra I raa /‘ c (hlnax t 0 *»**«*. ««*nator Alexander Simpson, special S,„™ il 47v™‘',TTr o, 'f'-. -'W: 1 "’" "“• •'*•>«' “HOI'-0., anti 1t,.,0n,1 ihrm villi,- 1S? - Ul, • 1 ranees Stevens Hail, ami llenry Stevens, the defendants. ! t (C of>,\ right, 1026. Iniematioiial Newsreel.) * PREDICTS HILJaES WILL SUCCEED Wm. M. BUTLER New York. Nov. 22.—0 P)— I The New York American says today that Charles I). Hilles. of New York, is likely to succeed Wm. M. Butler, of Massachusetts, as chair man of the Republican national committee next spring. The pa per says that the matter was dis cussed at week-end conferences here of pnrty leaders. e 1 II P)—Re markable resistance was displayed in the New \ork cotton exchange o the increase of 451.000 bales in the government crop estimate of 18.3110.000 bales. Prices dropped approximately SI.OO a bale, but large buying orders were encoun tered on the decline. Slight Effect at New Orleans. New Orleans, Nov. 22.—(/P) The government cotton crop fore cast announced today had only a slight effect on the market here. December dropped 16 points, Jan uary 11 jmiiits. and Maceh 0 Total giimings of 12JV>3708 bull)* was i-maller than expected;* V \vh : fci 'n* cron f »i:etjai!t of hales vtM hrvgiM' than expected. | SEEK BODIES OF CREW WHICH PERISHED AT SEA .. j Men Were Killed in Explosion Which Wrecked Tug Bahaibi Two Miles Off Coast of Washington. Anacorfes, Wash. Nov. 22.—(/P) With one body recovered, a search by U. S. coast guardsmen went forward today for the rest of the crew of nine on the Kfbfoot tug Bahaila, which sank after a terrific explosion two miles from here yesterday. The body was identified as that of WilPam F. Han-i ften. deck hand, and brother of the ship's master. It was washed ashore at Samish Island, ten miles from the scene of the Want. A search of the beaches of the many islands*near hero was begun at once by volunteers. The likelihood of an.votw , escaping the explosion which demol-' ished the ship was declared slight,, however. Wreckage of the pilot house and the j life boats was found five miles away, j The vessel which was tow : ng a log' raft now lies in 260 feet of water. A fragment of the ship’s wheel was found on the beach near here. It had , been hurtled more than a mile. ! Thanksgiving Proclamation. Rale gh. N. C„ Nov. 21.—OP)—Gov ernor McLean today issued a prooln-: mation calling upon the people* ' of i North Carolina to observe Thursday, j November 25th as a day of public ] thanksgiving and prayer. ‘T deem this a fitting time for our people to remember that our prosper ity may be transitory and ephemeral unlcßs we realixe the virtues that j make our prosperity possible. It is j most appropriate that wo fully realize j tour dependence upon Alnrghty Hod for all that is good and lasting.” tho _ executive proclamation declared. j The document was issued in ac-j eordanco with a time-honored custom and the.law of the state. ) ■, Snow Falls at Oxford. Oxford, NoV. 21. —The first snow fal* of the season in Oxford began this morning at 11 o’clock and con jtinued four hours. j Storm Breaks in U. D. C. Meeting Over j Member Having Picture in Newspapers , . ' l Richmond. Va. v Nov. 20.—A storm i j broke out of sky on the floor ’ of the 33rd annual convention .of the 1 ! United Daughters of the Confederacy [here todav and after it had subsided I t .;, e delegates found themselves on ree -5 i ord as regretting that they were una ; i ble under the organization’s by-laws 1 to discipline a member who had ; caused her picture to be printed m , a local newspaper. ; The affair caused the biggest ripple in the amity so much sought by offi e cials and which had market the pro b ceedings of the convention up to the e ! time the attention of the delegates s’ was called to the picture of Mrs. Nor ma u y. Randolph, of Richmond, form- CON CORD. N. C., MONDAY. NOVEMBER 22, 1926 “PEACHES” GIVEN S3OO WEEK WHILE HER SUIT PENDS "White Plains, N. Y.. Nov. 22. L4 3 )—Mrs. Frances Heenan "Peach es” Browning was awarded S3OO a week alimony ami counsel fees of $8,500 pending settlement of her suit for separation from her hus band, Edward W. Browning, weal thy real estate man.-' by Justice More ha user today. FISH TALE OFFERED AS STEVENS ALIBI Henry Stevens Hopes to Prove by Fish He llad No Part in Double : M.urtler. Court House. Smnervilie, X. J..^ V. 22. (JF) • A .d:v-po,:mi 'w2 .caught by Arthur Applegate, of Lav-j allettc, on the night of September 11, j 1022. continued to win posthumous j fame as the Hall-Mills trial proceeded i here today. j This big blue fish looms large in the alibi offered by Henry Stevens, charged with his sister. Mrs. Frances Stevens Hall, and bi'other, Willie Stevens, charged with the murder of Mrs. Eleanor R. Mills, j Henry Stevens testified in his own defense t'iiat he weighed a six-pounder caught by Arthur Applegate on the night the choir singer was slain with j the Rev. Edward W. Hall. Neigh-j bors from Lavalette came again today j to testify that Stevens was on the beach the night of September 14, .1922, three today placing him t’aere at 10 o’clock or after. The killing is al leged to have taken place at about 10:20 o’clock, fifty miles from the New Jersey coast town. I • REIDSVILLE THREATENED BY EARLY MORNING FIRE ; Buhling of Reidsville Motor Company and Several Autos Destroyed by the Fire. Reidsville. X. C., Nov. 22. —C4 1 )— Fire which for hours threatened to J destroy a whole block in Pne business j district of this city at an early hour ! this morning was put under control. ! The flames destroyed the double build j itig of the Reidsville Motor Company. Damage will probably reach $30,000, a | number of cars in the building being i destroyed. One truck from the Greens | boro fire department was sent here to ! aid local fighters, but the blaze had j been practically brought under eon | trol when ffiiey arrived. i Sclieitcr Carpenter Expects Run For Congress In 1928. ! Charlotte. Nov. 21.—Solicitor John G- Carpenter, who has been a power .in the 14th judicial district for years, 'expects to seek the Democratic nomi- I nation for Congress from the ninth district in 1028. it was announced | here upon authorization by his j friends. The announcement was no ! surprise, a report having been cur rent for some months that Mr. Car penter had his eyes on Major A. L. Bulwinkle's seat in the lower house of Congress. er president general and now honorary president. The picture was that of Mrs. Sam uel Burleigh Milton, president of the Bureaugard’s chapter U. D. C of the District of Columbia and showed Mrs. Milton in a bathing suit, surrounded by cups and other awards for life saving and wearing t’he congressional medal and bar for saving life on High seas. The underline declared that Mrs. Milton is the only woman in the United States to receive the modal of honor twice and that she was also awarded the bronze medal of France > for conspicuous service during the i World War and had received medals • and bars for service from the Ameri - can Rod Cross. OTTO WOOD LEAVES mm AGAIN; IS ms THIRD ESCAPE Was Released From Soli j tary Confinement Sep ; tember 14 Over Protest ; of Superintendent Pou. LEAK ABSOLVES PRISON OFFICERS Wood Was Serving 22 to j 30-Year Sentence for the j Murder of A. W. Kaplan, Greensboro Pawnbroker j Raleigh, Nov. 22.—(/P)—Otto Wood. < serving a twenty-two to thirty-year j sentence at State prison for t'iie mur jdor of A. W. Kaplan, pawnbroker of { Greensboro, escaped from prison early i today. It was his third escape, j Wood had been in solitary confine -1 mint until September 14th 'since his Ifoicppe and recapture last November. | til September the board of directors j over the protests of Superintendent I Pou, ordered that the prisoner be giv vere injured, giving that state the lead for the week, in traffic fatalities, with eleven. Georgia’s crossing toll for the week was four dead and two hurt, while three were killed in North Carolina and one each in Florida, Virginia and South Carolina in crashes betwee’n trains and automobiles. North Car olina had seven deaths and 24 in jured in all sorts of traffic accidents. LEGION AND AUXILIARY WILL FIGHT PACIFISTS Will Try to Keep Such Persons From Speaking in North Carolina. Charlotte, Nov. 22.—de termined fight against radical activi ties in North Carolina will be waged by the State American Legion and the Legion Auxiliary, the executive com mittee of the two bodies decided at a joint session here today. The ac tion of the committees related par-, tieularly, it was said, to pacifists. A resolution was adopted calling' for collection of information regard ing pacifists by the state organization and furnishing three reports to local posts wfoero such persons may be booked -'to speak. Recommend*ti n was made that action be taken to ha t ! such speaking tours. Says James Joyce Is Married Again. Chicago, Nov. 22. — (JP) —The Trib-; une says today that James Stanly Joyce, Chicago lumberman and third husband of Peggy Joyce, from whom he was divorced in 1921, was married 'here Saturday night to Mrs. R. N. ' Vail, of New York. Storms Ravaging Southwest Europe. Paris, Nov. 22.—( A *)—Storms with scarcely a lull between them, are rav aging southwestern Europe. Ports on both the Atlantic and Med iterranean coast 6 are filled with bat tered vessels. The fishing industry is at a complete standstill. The Rivierra again has suffered badly. Movement Now Being Made For a State Highway Patrol Force Raleig'.i Tribune Bureau - Sir Walter Hotel Raleigh. Nov. 22.—Formulation oft ’ the program which will be presented j to the general assembly by the North , 1 Carolina Municipal Association for! enactment at the approaching session ! of the legislature will be worked out i ( ! at a meeting of the members of the} association and any or all city of-1 ’ fichu’s, whether members of f.ie nsso- > ■ eiation or not, at a called meeting nfi the association here on December Sth, i according to an,announcement by W. L. Dowell, secretary of the associa tion. The meeting will be held in i j the court room of the Raleigh mu-! M nicipal building, and will’ conyene at 12 o’clock. ) A number of matters of considera ble importance to the cities and towns -' of the state are expected to come up j at this time, among which probably ,! will be f.ie question of a state highway j patrol force and the licensing of au-i | tomobile drivers by the state.- instead i ■ ] of by tin* individual mtuircipalities, as . ’ | Is flow the case. Although the licensing of nutomo- | j bile drivers by the state, instead of ■ ■ • -- cotton seed meal : i IN FEEDING LIVESTOCK ; Recent Experiment Made by Expert at State College. Raieigh, Nov. 22. —(4 s ) —Cheap cot ' ton has produced a cheap by-product, cottonseed men!, which recent experi -1 merits show may be used to advantage j in feeding livestock. •| One of the most logical uses for this by-product is as a protein ration for swine, or at least this is the con clusion arrived at by Earl H. Hostet ■ ler. in charge of swine research work jat State College. The swine'experts i to determine the place of cottonseed ; meal in the pig's daily ration have I proved disappointing, but that cotton | seed oil,, cheap as it is now, is stead- I I ily gaining popularity. “Experimental results show that the meal cannot be used as a substitute for corn or other high carbohydrate feeds for pigs as it can for cattle.*’ ! Mr. Hostetler stated, “but on the oth er hand, if the meal may be .used as a supplement to the protein ration and fed -with corn, the inerease in the value of the meal to the whole south will be tremendous. We have conducted two feeding trials at the North Carolina experiment station which indicate that this meal can be used as a protein supplement.” The first trial conducted at the up per Coastal Plain station near Rocky Mount with purebred Hampshire pigs showed that when cottonseed meal was a part of the protein ration, the hogs could be fed at less cost and the profit per pig was greater. With two lots of 25 pigs each fed 55 days, it cost $7.35 to produce a hundred pounds of gain using shelled eorn, fish meal and mineral. The profit per pig was $5.28. When the fish meal was reduced one-half and this made up with cot tonseed meal, the cost of producing a hundred pounds of gain dropped to $6.73 and the profit per pig jumped to $6.08. The cottonseed meal used in was valued at S3O a ton and the price is now below that point. The second test was conducted on the State College farm at Raleigh and fifteen purebred Berkshire pigs were used in each lot. The pigs were fed for 84 days and during that time it cost $8.04 to produce 100 pounds of j gain when the pigs were fed a ration of shelled corn, fishmeal and fineral. The profit per pig was $6.30. Jto the second lot where the ration was corn, fish meal, cottonseed oil and mineral, the cost of producing 100 pounds gain dropped to $7.83 and the profit per pig jumped to $7.78. “The increased profit per pig where pottonseed oil was used is not so great,” said Professor Hostetler, “but it would easily pay for the cost of marketing a carload of two hundred pounds considering the prices paid for the feeds that we used.” Professor Hostetler does not claim his experiments to be conclusive and he is conducting further research into the problem. A STUDENT STUNT ENDS IN THE JAIL Former President of Student Council Given Six Months’ Term. Norman, Okla.. Nov. 18.—A student kidnapping at the University of Okla homa last year Tuesday brought Lee Thompson, former president of the student council, a jail sentence of six months and a SSOO fine. Thompson was found guilty in county court of violating the state anti-masking law. enacted in 1023. His attorneys gave notice of an ap peal. 1 Joe Crowe, a student at the Uni j versity last year and now a school teacher at Camargo, instituted the prosecution, alleging that a masked band of which Thompson was m mem ber abducted him from a meeting of the Scabbard and Blade, a military society,- and mistreated him after tak ing him into the country. The ab-1 i ductors wore the insignia of the D. D. M. C., a secret student organiza i tion, which disbanded after the inci- I dent, Crowe testified. It was brought out that both Thompson and Crowe were members of the Scabbard and Blade. Thompson did not take the wit ness stand, his attorneys explaining he wished to avoid revealing the name of his companions. Over a year in a trance, Mitf Dorris Ilinton. a young working woman of Nottingham, England, as beginning to show signs of recovery. She occasionally understands what is kaid to her, and she recently spoke a few words, but only to relapse m -1 to silence. J. B. SHERRILL, Editor and Publisher -by Iho towns and cities, wc ve ] many cities of the sta* J j slice of JkiSt, j the associate Vs'iioh a l i step, sir ai-for the ad- j | vantage c j>« j and would materially add to the effee-] ti veil ess of ail police forces. NO REPUBLICAN MEMBERS EAST OF YADKIV RIVER! For the First Time in a Generation in I State General Assembly. Raleigh. X. Xov. 22.— UP)— For the first time in a generation the General Arsomb'y of North Carolini will convene here in January witli- I out a single Republican senator or representative" from eost of the Yad kin river. , ' This was disclosed in a eompila 'tion of return? from the general ! election of November 2 made pubtfc j here today by.. Henry M- London, legislative reference librarian. The i compilation was on on unofficial basis as the State Board of Elections does not meet here to canvass the re turns until next Tuesday. Sixteen Republican* will sit in the House of Representatives with 104 Democrats, and two adherents with , the G. O. P. will mingle with the 4X Democrats in the senate, the figures show. In 11)25 there were three Re publicans the Senate and ID Rep resentative*. The three counties east of the Yad kin which sent Republican* to the j house last session and which were \ won over by the Democrats this year were Johnston. Sampson and Bruns wick. The Senatorial district lost ~o the Republicans was listed as the Thirty-third, couprlsing five counties I in the extreme weftten portion of tae j state. There It. J. Roane* of Whit-1 tier, is credited with the election al-i though all five of thAeonutios return-) ed Republican Representative*. Tm counties in the district are t’lieroKee, j Clay. Graham. Maeon and Swain. The Republican representation was ) swelled by late returns, as on the j face of early indications is was be- * lieved that only twelve counties would return Republican representa tives. The senuforships. however, were different, as Democratic leaders virtually conceded three seats. The | result in the Thirty-Third came as a distinct surprise. i Mr. London’s compilations show that 36 Democrats andtwo Republi cans who have been in the House before will be back at the next ses sion, leaving 82 newcomers. In the Senator only nine old heads will be backs and the are all Demo crats, C. P. J. MOONEY DIES# WHILE AT HIS WORK j Was President and Managing Editor! of the Memphis Commercial-Appeal, j Memphis. Tenn., Nov. 22. —(4 s )—C. j P. J. Mooney, editor of the Memphis Commercia 1-Appeal, died suddenly in | his office here today of apoplexy. Mr. Mooney came to his office this morn’ng against the protests of his wife, who said he was suffering from influenza. Soon after he went to his desk he -suffered a fainting spell and died without regaining consciousness. Preparation for the publication of an afternoon paper by the Commercial Publishing Co. had heaped additional i burdens on the nationally known edi tor and published who recently an nounced that the company would is sue the Evening Appeal beginning De cember Ist. Mr. Mooney was born in Bardstown Junction, Ky., September 15. 1865. He is survived by his widow, who was Corinne O’Sell O’Connof. of Pine Bluff. Ark., and three children. He took over the office of Pres'dent pf the Commercial Publishing Co. about three years ago. retaining the j duties of managing editor of the pa per. It was soon apparent to his | friends that the double duties of his j position was sapping his physical strength. . Mr. Mooney’s general health in re cent months, however, had appeared to be excellent. Mr. Mooney’s death occurred at II :40 o’clock, approximately five nr'n utes after his collapse at his desk. I)r. Isruis Leroy, his physician, who had been summoned, arrived shortly before i his last breath, but the editor was uu- J conscious and died without speaking. 1 Surviving children are: Mrs. Rob-! ert Galloway. Hugh Mooney and C. j P. J. Mooney, Jr., all of Memphis. Autos Take 676 Lives in Month. Washington, Nov. 21.—Deaths du*- to automobile operations in the 78 larger cities f the Limited Stotes dur- j ing the four week period ending Nov- ; ember 6 were 676,. a total greater I than those for any like period sinep ■ the commence department began J compiling automobile fatalities early in 1925. During the some period * year ago, the deaths were 612. and in four weeks ending October 9 1926. they were 650. * j FALL AND DOHENY FINALLY CARRIED INTO COURT ROOM 1 Tt IS I Trial Is the Result of Oii 1 Scandal of 1924 and Case ! Is Expected to Contiittie j Many Days. WILL QUESTION FALL CLOSELY iWant to Know About SIOO,- 000 Payment Doherty Made to Him and Other Facts About Trades. \ Washington. Nov. 22.—(4 5 )-*-The i many-fingered hand of the oil scan* ] dal of 1924 reached into the eriintnat I courts for the first time today when |Albert H. Fall and Edward L., lh>- I bony were t ailed to trial here on a | charge of conspiracy. I The former Interior Secretary anti the millionaire oil magnate, personal I friends s : nee boyhood, were surround* ;ed by a battalion of attorney ? as they took their plat-os for the week of prospective legal jousting. Tire trial will go into all the circumstances of Doheny's SIOO,OOO payment to ffjpj while the latter was in the cabinet, and qf the part played by Fall in the award of the Elk Hills oil lease to his old time friend. Ixtiig before the trial opened a small court room was crowded. Doheuy ar ! rved early and took the seat between j the counsel. Fall came in later nnp moved about the court room talking with counsel, and others. ESTIMATED CROP FOR/ STATE 1.200.006 BALES On a Basis of 186.3 Pounds Yield of Lint Per Acre. Raleigh Tribune Bureau Sir Walter Hotel Raleigh. Nov. 22.—The cotton crop in North Carolina showed a retuarka j ble increase in the condition of—. i per cent, of a full crop over the 73 per eent. condition reported two weeks ago and 71 per cent, a month ago. The forecast is 1,2(50.000 bales on a I basis of 186.3 pounds yields of lint per , acres. This remarkable crop was not • due to an increase in acreage, but . rathejr to the remarkably good cotton. 1 weather this year. Last year’* ! was 1.102.000 bales with a yield of J 262 pounds to the acre, according to j the formal statement on crop condi tions for North Carolina, issued by j the North Carolina crop reportiri§ ser- I vice. Now that the cotton farmers really see the evidence of tremendous cotton production in North Carolina, they are losing sight of their criticisms of two ■ months ago. The crop is now really larger than most growers can appre ciate. T'lie ginnings to November 34th showed 863.417 bales for North Car olina. This is by far the largest crop the state has ever made. While the production is probably equal to this figure, there is a good probability that not all of the lint will be picked, especially so if the weather is bad j after this date. ' Experience has shown that cotton i crop yields can be forecasted fairly ac | curately by counting the bolls. This I method has been followed rather close i ly for the past tliyee seasons, in ad* 1 dition to the condition and yield estf- v ! mates. Then the data this year has I been strengthened more than ever by i the comparison of ginners’ figures and estimates. Statistical methods to pro vide reliable forecasts of crops as well as of industrial probabilities. • - While the reporters showed that the size of bolls were 92 per cent, of the usual size, a year ago they re ported 84 per cent. Thus this year’s bolls are evidently larger than last year s. Previous experience lias shotvn that while the estimates might be for 75 per cent, ginned, the actual gin nings computed for the same date, at the close of the season were, about twelve points less than this.* The pier eent. picked has shown the same trend. Thus by allowing a so-called spread or bias, the actual per cent ginned or picked can be closely approximated, In addition to the low price being received for cotton staple, the price of $1.62 per hundred weig’lit being paid for picking seed cotton, which is the same as that paid a year ago. still 1 further reduces the margin or net nrice of lint. Tt is estimated that 65 per cent, of the crop has been ginned ami 75 per cent, has been picked. The weather has been unusually favorable for harvesting the crop this fall. The frosts and freezes have done no great damage as the crop was already - too large. The cold weather always interferes with the t*ase of picking but the absence of leave* makes lint. The forecasted estimate of ginnings to November 14th wan 880.000 bales Former Emperor IIL Doom,. Holland. Nov. 22.—(4 s )— Former Emperor William of Germany is confined to his bed by a severe £old which has sett’ed through hi* body so that he cannot move. It was stated that his condition is painful, but that he is in no immediate danger. THE WEATHER Mostly cloudy tonight and with slowly rising temperature*. Gen tle to moderate winds, mostly north and northeast. NO. 41.